Advances in Physics: Astronomy, Astrophysics and Particle Physics

About Advances in Physics: Astronomy, Astrophysics and Particle Physics

Advances in Physics: Astronomy, Astrophysics and Particle Physics is a brand new, fully open-access journal building upon the rich legacy of pioneering astrophysics and astronomy research publishing at Taylor & Francis, which commenced 225 years ago with the foundation of Philosophical Magazine.

Advances in Physics: Astronomy, Astrophysics and Particle Physics joins the well-respected Advances in Physics group of journals which have themselves developed from Philosophical Magazine.

The journal focuses particularly on new and emerging fields of research across a broad spectrum of areas including cosmology, high energy / particle physics, space science, astronomy, and astrophysics.

Advances in Physics: Astronomy, Astrophysics and Particle Physics welcomes articles from all fields at the intersection of these exciting fields. With the launch of exciting missions like JWST and Euclid, as well as exciting new findings in gravitational waves and other regimes. We look forward to publishing your research in our journal.

Taylor & Francis are currently supporting a 100% APC discount for all authors until the end of 2024, plus VAT or other local taxes where applicable in your country. There is no submission charge.

                Meet the editor

                Professor Eric Perlman is an observational astrophysicist at the Florida Institute of Technology, in Melbourne, Florida.

                His research concentrates on the nuclei, their physics and evolution, particularly those in which the central black hole has a large rate of accretion and is abnormally active (the so-called active galactic nuclei or AGN). He specializes in the structure and physics of high-velocity outflows from compact objects and AGN, particularly relativistic jets.

                He has a strong interest in observational cosmology and the phenomenology of quantum gravity, and takes a multi-waveband approach to these subjects. He has worked in every energy range from the radio through gamma-rays, and is a frequent user of both space-based and ground-based observatories.

                Eric Perlman, editor of Advances in Physics
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                Questions about open access?

                Find out more about the publishing process for open access journals at our dedicated site for the step-by-guide to publication.

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                Ready to submit?

                Find out how to submit your paper by reading the Instructions for Authors.